Hilar cholangiocarcinoma

Gallbladder and bile duct

Gallbladder and bile duct

The gallbladder serves as a reservoir for bile, a yellow-green fluid produced in your liver. Bile flows from your liver into your gallbladder, where it's held until needed during the digestion of food. When you eat, your gallbladder releases bile into the bile duct, where it's carried to the upper part of the small intestine (duodenum) to help break down fat in food.

Hilar cholangiocarcinoma is a type of bile duct cancer that occurs in the bile ducts that lead out of the liver (hepatic ducts) and join with the gallbladder. Hilar cholangiocarcinomas are also known as Klatskin tumors.

Diagnosis

Tests and procedures used to diagnose hilar cholangiocarcinoma include:

Imaging tests, such as a CT and MRI

Blood test for very high levels of CA 19-9 tumor maker

Biopsy using ERCP and specialized lab testing with fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH)

Doctors typically don't recommend collecting cells using a needle inserted through your skin and into your bile duct (transperitoneal biopsy). This technique increases the risk of cancer recurrence and may make you ineligible for a liver transplant.

Treatment

Which treatment is best for you will depend on the location and extent of your hilar cholangiocarcinoma. Treatment typically involves surgery, liver transplant or supportive treatments to reduce your pain and other symptoms.

Surgery

Surgery for hilar cholangiocarcinoma involves removing the:

Cancer

Surrounding bile ducts

Portions of the liver

Nearby lymph nodes

The surgeon then connects the remaining bile ducts to the small intestine so that bile can still reach your digestive tract and help digest food.

Liver transplant

People with early-stage hilar cholangiocarcinoma who aren't able to undergo surgery may consider liver transplant. Chemotherapy and radiation are typically used before the liver transplant in order to kill as many cancer cells as possible before surgery.

This treatment typically involves:

Intravenous chemotherapy with a medicine that makes your cells more vulnerable to radiation

External beam radiation therapy

Internal radiation (brachytherapy) using small wires that are placed near the cancer and slowly release radiation

Chemotherapy in pill form until transplant surgery

Minimally invasive surgery to look for signs that cancer has spread

Liver transplant with a donor liver if one becomes available

You may undergo routine tests to evaluate your health while waiting for a liver transplant to make sure you're healthy enough for the surgery.

Chemotherapy

People with advanced hilar cholangiocarcinoma who aren't able to undergo surgery or liver transplant may receive chemotherapy to slow the growth of the cancer.

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